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Gulliver's Travels' 'nonsense' language is based on Hebrew, claims scholar

Written By Unknown on Monday, August 17, 2015 | 8:58 AM

Professor of English at the University of Houston says his research points to satire’s use of words derived from Jewish language

Isaac Asimov might have dismissed the invented languages in Gulliver’s Travels as “made up nonsense” but a professor at the University of Houston believes he has cracked a code dreamed up by Jonathan Swift almost 300 years ago, arguing that the “nonsense” words are actually Hebrew.

Swift’s satire, first published in 1726, sees Gulliver travel to several “remote regions of the world”, including Lilliput, where he finds himself tied to the ground by six-inch-high human figures, where he meets a man “as tall as an ordinary spire steeple”, and the country of the Houyhnhnms and Yahoos, respectively talking horses, and filthy, human-like beings.

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